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Des Moines

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Des Moines

Capital city of Iowa, on the Des Moines River (a tributary of the Mississippi); seat of Polk County; population (2000 est) 198,700. It is a major road, railway, and air centre for the surrounding Corn Belt region; most of the manufacturing industry is connected with agriculture. Des Moines is the third-largest centre in the world for the insurance industry, after London, England, and Hartford, Connecticut.

History

Fort Des Moines was founded in 1843, and the surrounding settlement was incorporated as the city of Des Moines in 1851; it became the state capital in 1857. With the coming of the railways in the 19th century Des Moines developed into an industrial and commercial centre for a wide hinterland. Local coal deposits were excavated here 1910–20. The city suffered extensive damage during floods in 1993.

Educational and cultural institutions

Des Moines is the seat of several colleges including Drake University (1881), Grand View College (1896), the University of Osteopathic Medicine and Health Sciences (1898), and Open Bible College (1930). The Des Moines Art Center was designed by the Finnish-born architect Eliel Saarinen. There is a zoo, botanical gardens, an aquarium, and the state historical centre. There have been three courthouses, built in 1846, 1858, and 1900.

Attractions

Des Moines is the location of the annual Iowa State Fair held each August. It attracts about one million visitors per year and was the inspiration for the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical, originally a film, State Fair. The fair, first held in 1854, is now the largest event in Iowa and one of the largest fairs in the USA. The State Capitol building is in a classical style and is noted for its gold roof. It is one of 123 entries on the national register of historic places; others include a fire station and historic houses and districts.

Origin of the name

Des Moines was originally named Fort Racoon in 1843, but the War Department considered the name in bad taste and replaced it with Fort Des Moines after the name given to the local river by French travellers. Des Moines was probably a corruption of the American Indian name for the river, Moingonia, meaning ‘the river of mounds’. The ‘Fort’ title was dropped after 1857 when Des Moines replaced Iowa City as the state capital.

Des Moines

River flowing through Iowa and Minnesota, USA; length 861 km/535 mi. It rises in forks in southwest Minnesota, which converge south of Dakota City in Iowa, passes through the city of Des Moines and the Red Rock Reservoir, and joins the Mississippi near Keokuk, Iowa.

A chief tributary is the East Fork River, which rises in Martin County, in southwest Minnesota; length 193 km/120 mi. It flows southeast and south into Iowa to join the main river near Humboldt. The Boone and Raccoon rivers are also important tributaries. The river was set up as a canoe and kayak trail, stretching 404 mi/646 km from Estherville to Keokuk.



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? Mentioned in ? References in classic literature
 
The only hotel of that name was in the Rue des Moines.
1894, when I wandered up the main street of Des Moines and was variously invited by strangers into various blind pigs--I remember drinking in barber-shops, plumbing establishments, and furniture stores.
They worked in Chicago, Des Moines, Fort Wayne, but they were always unfortunate.
 
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